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Wild Life is the debut studio album by the British-American rock band Wings and the third studio album by Paul McCartney after the breakup of the Beatles.The album was mainly recorded in seven sessions between 24 July and 4 September 1971 (additional overdubs were added during sessions in October 1971 [1]), at EMI Studios (now Abbey Road Studios) by McCartney, his wife Linda, session drummer ...
"Wild Wild Life" is a song by American rock band Talking Heads, released as the lead single from their seventh studio album True Stories. It was the band's third and last top 40 hit on the US Billboard Hot 100 .
Paul McCartney had taped a demo of "Tomorrow" before he and Linda began recording their album Ram in New York City in late 1970. [2] The song is a piano ballad and ends with a gospel-style coda, [3] which is played at a slower tempo than the main portion. [4]
Wildlife is the second studio album by American post-hardcore band La Dispute, released October 4, 2011, on independent label No Sleep Records. Recording sessions for the album took place primarily at StadiumRed in New York City in April 2011.
"Teenage Wildlife" is a song written by David Bowie in 1980 for the album Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps). Running at almost seven minutes, the song was the longest track on Scary Monsters, and Bowie's longest composition since "Station to Station" (1976), although it was surpassed in length by later tracks such as 2003's "Bring Me the Disco King" and 2016's "Blackstar".
Wild Life (Hedley album), 2013 "The Wild Life" (song), by Bananarama "Wild Life" (Jack & Jack song), 2014 "Wild Life" (OneRepublic song), 2020 "Wild Life", a song by Captain Beefheart from Trout Mask Replica "The Wild Life", a song by Vacationer on their album Relief; D.I.T.C. Presents Wild Life, a 2001 EP by Diggin' in the Crates Crew
"Wild Life" is a single by Jack & Jack, released on 2 August 2014. The official music video produced by theAudience and directed by Niklaus Lange was premiered 31 October 2014. The song managed to peak at number 87 on the Billboard Hot 100 .
Animal rights has been a subject of both popular and independent music since the 1970s. [1] Associated with the environmentalist musical counterculture of the previous decade, animal rights songs of the 1970s were influenced by the passage of animal protection laws and the 1975 book Animal Liberation. [1]